The prospect of a wholesale overhaul of the health care system is bringing a new face to the Capitol Hill lobbying scrum. The National Community Pharmacists Association (NCPA), a network that represents independent pharmacists across the country, is spending much more money than it ever has before in an effort to make its voice heard. But in a legislative fight that has drawn record amounts from all parties, the pharmacists could be drowned out all the same. Until 2006, the NCPA spent from $100,000 to $300,000 on lobbying per election cycle.